G. P. Marsh - Hiram Powers Correspondence

George Perkins Marsh and Hiram Powers (1805-1873), the most
famous American sculptor of the nineteenth century, had been boyhood friends
in Woodstock, Vermont. They lost touch when the Powers family moved to
Cincinnati but resumed contact in 1847 when Marsh and a former governor of
Vermont, Charles Paine, wrote to Powers about commissions for the Vermont
State House. By this time Powers was an established sculptor in Florence,
where he had emigrated in 1837. The two men renewed their relationship after
Marsh visited Italy in 1849 en route to his diplomatic post in
Constantinople, and maintained close personal ties until Powers' death in
1873.

Powers had a long and bitter relationship with members of
Congressional committees who selected work for the new U.S. Capitol. This
and other commissions are fully discussed in his correspondence with Marsh.
The two men also shared an interest in Classical sculpture. Powers' letters
describe in some detail the thinking that underlay his approach to art.

In addition to artistic matters, Powers and Marsh wrote
frequently about the Civil War, its personalities, conduct, and
significance. The letters also contain descriptions of the Powers family and
of their circle of friends, including Robert and Elizabeth Barrett Browning.
Also figuring in the correspondence are Caroline Crane Marsh, Marsh's wife,
and George Ozias Marsh, his son, as well as Longworth Powers, Powers' son.

The letters in this collection date from 1847 to 1871. They are
housed in the Marsh Collection at the Special Collections Department,
Bailey-Howe Library, University of Vermont; the Powers Papers at the
Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, and the New-York
Historical Society.